Kean v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 21, 2008
Docket1-07-1341 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Kean v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Kean v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kean v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

SIXTH DIVISION November 21, 2008

No. 1-07-1341

NANCY KEAN, Individually and on Behalf ) of All Others Similarly Situated, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of WAL-MART STORES, INC., ) Cook County, Illinois. WAL-MART.COM, U.S.A., LLC, and ) WAL-MART ASSOCIATES, INC., ) ) No. 06 CH 21735 Defendants-Appellees ) ) (Chip Russell, Individually and on Behalf ) Honorable of All Others Similarly Situated, ) Philip L. Bronstein, ) Judge Presiding. Intervenor and Plaintiff-Appellant; ) ) The Department of Revenue and Alexi ) Giannoulias as Treasurer of the State of Illinois, ) ) Intervenors and Defendants-Appellees). )

JUSTICE JOSEPH GORDON delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff Nancy Kean and Plaintiff-Intervenor Chip Russell (collectively plaintiffs) filed

complaints against Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., Wal-Mart.com, U.S.A., LLC, and Wal-Mart

Associates, Inc. (collectively Wal-Mart), alleging that Wal-Mart violated Illinois law by charging

an unauthorized sales tax upon shipping charges for goods purchased through its website. The

trial court dismissed their complaints, finding that under the facts as alleged by plaintiffs, the

shipping charges were subject to sales tax as a matter of law. For the reasons that follow, we No. 07-1341

affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

On October 12, 2006, Kean filed her class action complaint against Wal-Mart, in which

she alleged the following: Through Wal-Mart’s website, http://www.walmart.com, Kean

purchased a mini-trampoline for personal use on September 9, 2006. The price of the trampoline

was $23.33, the shipping charge was an additional $7.97, and the sales tax charge was $2.74,

based upon the sum of the product price and the shipping charge. Kean stated that although she

paid, she sent a letter to Wal-Mart on that same day protesting the imposition of sales tax on the

cost of shipping, but Wal-Mart represented that the tax was proper and would not rescind the

charge.

Kean then stated that such shipping charges are not properly subject to sales tax. She

therefore sought relief in three counts. In Count I, she contended that by collecting an

unauthorized tax on shipping, Wal-Mart violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive

Business Practices Act, 815 ILCS 505/2 et seq. (West 2006); accordingly, on behalf of herself

and all other similarly situated consumers, she sought actual damages. In Count II, she

contended that Wal-Mart was unjustly enriched to the extent that it did not deliver the taxes it

collected to the state, and she sought disgorgement of any such wrongfully retained money.

Finally, in Count III, she sought injunctive relief preventing Wal-Mart from collecting such taxes

in the future.

Attached to the complaint as an exhibit is a printout of the alleged letter of protest that

Kean sent to Wal-Mart’s online Help Desk on September 9, 2006, which reads as follows:

-2- No. 07-1341

“I recently checked with the State of Illinois, and was told that it is not legal to

charge tax on shipping. Therefore, you are charging too much tax on my order, which

should be charged at 8.75% on the item ONLY.

Please adjust and advise.”

Also attached is a response by a Wal-Mart customer service representative stating that Wal-Mart

is required to collect sales tax on taxable items shipped to Illinois and that shipping and handling

charges are subject to sales tax in applicable states.

On November 14, 2006, Kean filed a motion for a preliminary injunction requiring Wal-

Mart to deposit all the sales tax on shipping services that it had collected into a protest fund (i.e.,

an interest-bearing fund set up by the court to hold disputed tax money until the rightful owner

could be determined) instead of remitting the money to the state. In that motion, Kean averred

that such relief was necessary because, if Wal-Mart were to remit the collected taxes to the state,

Kean and the class members would no longer have standing to recover the taxes, pursuant to

Adams v. Jewel Companies, Inc., 63 Ill. 2d 336, 343, 348 N.E.2d 161, 165 (1976).

In its response to Kean’s motion, Wal-Mart stated that it had already remitted all

September 2006 taxes, including any tax paid by Kean, to the state on October 20, 2006. It

averred that it always remits taxes to the state on the 20th day of the month following the month

that the tax is charged. In support of this averment, it attached the affidavit of Michael Estes, the

Senior Tax Manager of Sales & Use Tax Systems for Wal-Mart. Based upon these allegations,

the court denied Kean’s motion.

-3- No. 07-1341

On November 29, 2006, the Illinois Department of Revenue and the State Treasurer1 (the

state defendants) sought to intervene in the action as additional defendants; their motion was

granted.

On December 20, 2006, Chip Russell sought to intervene in the action and file his own

complaint against Wal-Mart and the state defendants; his motion was granted. The following

day, Russell filed his complaint, in which, like Kean, he contended that Wal-Mart had committed

consumer fraud by collecting an unlawful tax on shipping charges for online sales. He alleged

that on December 5, 2006, he purchased a Leapfrog Leapster Learning System through Wal-

Mart’s website. The cost of the item was $59.84. To purchase the item, Russell allegedly

clicked a button to add the item to his “electronic shopping cart.” He then proceeded to the

“checkout” page, where he was presented with three different options for shipping; he chose the

option of having the item shipped in 2-3 days, at a stated cost of $11.97. Russell then alleged

that Wal-Mart imposed sales tax on the cost of the item as well as the shipping of that item,

bringing the total to $78.27, which he paid. He stated that it is Wal-Mart’s general practice to

charge sales tax on all shipping charges of this nature.

Russell averred that Wal-Mart contracts with a third-party shipper, such as UPS or

FedEx, to deliver purchases made at its online store, and the shipping charges it imposes are

entirely or almost entirely reflective of the actual cost paid to the third party. He also stated that

1 At the time of intervention, the Treasurer was Judy Barr Topinka; she has since been

succeeded as Treasurer by Alexi Giannoulias, who is substituted for her as the named defendant.

See 735 ILCS 5/2-1008(d) (West 2006).

-4- No. 07-1341

when a customer returns a product purchased online, the customer receives no refund of the

shipping charges unless the product was damaged.

Like Kean, Russell contended that the cost of shipping such items is not taxable under

Illinois law. Therefore, on behalf of himself and the class of similarly situated consumers,

Russell sought actual damages, an injunction requiring Wal-Mart to place all such collected taxes

in a protest fund rather than sending them to the State, and a permanent injunction barring Wal-

Mart from collecting such taxes in the future.

On the same day that he filed his complaint, Russell also moved for a preliminary

injunction requiring Wal-Mart to place the disputed tax money in a protest fund rather than

voluntarily remitting it to the state. The court held a hearing on that motion on January 17, 2007.

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